Quick Read
Summary is AI Generated. Newsroom Reviewed
-
Aggregate small business credit exposure rose 16% to Rs 46 lakh crore by Sept 30
-
Active loan accounts increased 11.8% to 7.3 crore, aided by government credit schemes
-
Loan overdue rates dropped from 1.7% to 1.4% between Sept 2023 and Sept 2025
Aggregate small business credit exposure has reached Rs 46 lakh crore, an increase of 16% as of September 30, a report said.
"Active loan accounts have grown by 11.8% to 7.3 crore. Policy support and multiple government credit schemes for MSMEs have helped sustain this momentum," CRIF High Mark-SIDBI Report said.
Portfolio quality has improved across segments, it said, adding that loans overdue by 91 to 180 days declined to around 1.4% as of September 2025, from 1.7% in September 2023, it said.
Enterprises continue to show lower risk profiles. Sole proprietors have also seen steady improvement and the share of very low and low-risk borrowers increased between September 2023 and September 2025, supported by better underwriting practices and wider use of digital data.
'Sole proprietors continue to dominate the credit ecosystem. They account for around 80% of total credit and nearly 90% of borrowers. The fastest-growing segment is sole proprietors with an entity presence. This segment has grown by 20% year-on-year, led largely by loans against property,' it said.
"As of September 2025, 23.3% of borrowers were new to credit and 12% were new to enterprise borrowing and this points to increasing formalisation," it added.
For enterprises, working capital loans dominate and account for nearly 57% of outstanding credit.
Term loans continue to support capital expenditure. Among sole proprietors, loans against property remain the largest category, followed by business loans and commercial vehicle loans. Unsecured lending has grown by 31% year-on-year, even amid concerns around stress.